Follow us on Facebook to receive important updates Follow us on Twitter to receive important updates Follow us on sina.com's microblogging site to receive important updates Follow us on Douban to receive important updates
Chinese Text Project
Simplified Chinese version
Back Forward
Daoism -> Zhuangzi -> Outer Chapters -> Heaven and Earth -> 15

From a tree a hundred years old
a portion shall be cut and fashioned into a sacrificial vase, with the bull figured on it,
which is ornamented further with green and yellow,
while the rest (of that portion) is cut away and thrown into a ditch.
If now we compare the sacrificial vase with what was thrown into the ditch,
there will be a difference between them as respects their beauty and ugliness;
but they both agree in having lost the (proper) nature of the wood.
So in respect of their practice of righteousness there is a difference between (the robber) Zhi on the one hand, and Zeng (Shen) or Shi (Qiu) on the other;
but they all agree in having lost (the proper qualities of) their nature.
Now there are five things which produce (in men) the loss of their (proper) nature.
The first is (their fondness for) the five colours which disorder the eye,
使 and take from it its (proper) clearness of vision;
the second is (their fondness for) the five notes (of music),
使 which disorder the ear and take from it its (proper) power of hearing;
the third is (their fondness for) the five odours which penetrate the nostrils,
and produce a feeling of distress all over the forehead;
the fourth is (their fondness for) the five flavours,
使which deaden the mouth, and pervert its sense of taste;
the fifth is their preferences and dislikes,
使which unsettle the mind, and cause the nature to go flying about.
These five things are all injurious to the life;
and now Yang and Mo begin to stretch forward from their different standpoints, each thinking that he has hit on (the proper course for men).
But the courses they have hit on are not what I call the proper course.
What they have hit on (only) leads to distress
- can they have hit on what is the right thing?
If they have, we may say that the dove in a cage has found the right thing for it.
Moreover, those preferences and dislikes, that (fondness for) music and colours, serve but to pile up fuel (in their breasts);
while their caps of leather, the bonnet with kingfishers' plumes, the memorandum tablets which they carry, and their long girdles, serve but as restraints on their persons.
Thus inwardly stuffed full as a hole for fuel,
and outwardly fast bound with cords,
when they look quietly round from out of their bondage, and think they have got all they could desire,
they are no better than criminals whose arms are tied together, and their fingers subjected to the screw,
or than tigers and leopards in sacks or cages,
and yet thinking that they have got (all they could wish).


Enjoy this site? Please help.Site design and content copyright 2006-2024. When quoting or citing information from this site, please link to the corresponding page or to https://ctext.org/ens. Please note that the use of automatic download software on this site is strictly prohibited, and that users of such software are automatically banned without warning to save bandwidth. 沪ICP备09015720号-3Comments? Suggestions? Please raise them here.